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Papers On Literature
Page 775 of 940
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Ted Kooser's "Abandoned Farmhouse" And William Stafford's "The Farm On The Great Plains" - Comparison
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7 pages in length. Reaching back for the past is an appropriate way to describe the elements of time and memory in Stafford's poem. In his mind is a recollection of how the farm felt when he lived there, both tangibly and metaphorically; as the years pass and he attempts to connect once again with this memory, he is disheartened when he is not able to rejoin the reminiscence he stores in his mind. In three short stanzas, Kooser paints a detailed mental image of a family who faced some type of adversity that caused them to flea, who comprised the family, what their economic situation was like and the state in which they quickly abandoned the farmhouse. At the same time, however, Kooser presents this tremendous insight in a wholly simplistic literary manner that child or adult can understand. The factor of time is clearly portrayed through the descriptive overtones so as to present an obvious cycle of events that transformed from contentment to panic. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TLCkooser.rtf
Teddy And Lenny In The Homecoming By Harold Pinter
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A 5 page paper that discusses the characters of Teddy and Lenny, brothers in this highly dysfunctional family. The essay discuses their personalities and behaviors and comments on why it was that Teddy was able to escape. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: PGhmcml9.rtf
Telemachus in Homer’s Odyssey
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A 5 page paper which examines the character of
Telemachus in Homer’s Odyssey. Bibliography lists 3 additional sources.
Filename: RAteleod.rtf
Telemakhos in Homer’s Odyssey
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A 3 page paper which examines the importance and
presence of the character Telemakhos in Homer’s Odyssey. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAtelehm.rtf
Teleology in Sembene’s “God’s Bits of Wood”
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A one-page paper looking at Ousmanne Sembene’s novel from a teleological perspective. The paper defines teleology as the belief that there is a larger purpose for everything that occurs, and shows how this is the operative model for the events described in Sembene’s novel. Bibliography lists one source.
Filename: KBteleo.wps
Tell It On The Mountain Tells It Like It Is
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This five-page-paper presents a discussion on the underlying and common feature that runs through James Baldwin's "Go Tell It On The Mountain." The features of what a dysfunctional family does in the upbringing of a child and the struggles the young man encounters when looking for his place in the world are nicely addressed. In addition the theme of being saved religiously is a cornerstone of the story and a cornerstone of the theme. Bibliography lists four sources.
Filename: CWOnMtn.wps
Teller of Tales: Canterbury Tales and Gulliver's Travels
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A 5 page paper which
compares the one of the tale tellers of "Canterbury Tales," the Knight, with the narrator,
Gulliver, in "Gulliver's Travels." No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAgullvr.wps
Temptation in the Short Stories of Nathaniel Hawthorne
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A 6 page paper which considers the theme of temptation in seven short stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The stories include "Ethan Brand," "My Kinsman, Major Molineux," "Rappaccini's Daughter," "Dr. Heidegger's Experiment," "The Ambitious Guest," "The Minister's Black Veil" and "Young Goodman Brown." Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TGnathaw.wps
Tennessee William's Tent Worm
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Tennessee Williams once wrote a short
story about Tent Worms. This 3 page essay explores the basic writing
techniques used to covey this highly emotive short story.
Filename: KTtntwrm.wps
Tennessee Williams -- Postmodern Writer
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This 6 page report
discusses the American writer and dramatist, Tennessee Williams
(1911-1983) and the ways in which his work and his life can be
defined as postmodern. Part of the power of the modernist
movement in 20th century literature was the force, or the will of
the artist, which is presented in the writing and is imprinted on
the reader. Williams’ powerful characters and their interactions
served to illustrate the postmodern reality of 20th century life.
In fact, Williams’ entire life and art was a model of
postmodernism in terms of his upbringing, lifestyle, artistry,
and creative synthesis of individual circumstances that
highlighted the universality of pain in the modern world.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: BWtennmd.wps
Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire": Postwar Issues
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5 pages in length. Postwar activities inherently reflect the inevitable process of catch-up and convergence; while this process takes place, scores of people work diligently as a means by which to piece their lives back together. The social, political and economic chaos that ensued in the South after World War II illustrated the difficulties returning soldiers had with urbanization, social class structure, as well as the relationships that existed between men and women. Nowhere is this more prevalent within popular culture than in Tennessee Williams' classic A Streetcar Named Desire, the story of Stanley, Stella and Blanche, all of who are inextricably related to these postwar issues without their even realizing it. No additional sources cited.
Filename: TLCdesir.wps
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